Wall Street Week Ahead: Bond investors look for Fed to
justify steepening yield curve
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[June 06, 2020] By
David Randall
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Expectations that the
global economy has dodged the worst-case coronavirus pandemic scenarios
have led to a dramatic sell-off in U.S. government bonds from their
record highs, pushing the yield curve to its steepest level since March.
Investors will get a chance next week to see whether the U.S. Federal
Reserve agrees with their optimism. The U.S. central bank's two-day
meeting, ending on Wednesday, will be the first since April when Fed
Chair Jerome Powell said the U.S. economy could feel the weight of the
economic shutdown for more than a year.
The meeting will follow a surprise gain in the Labor Department's
closely watched jobs report on Friday that pushed benchmark 10-year
Treasury yields to the highest since early March.
"The sell-off in the bond market in the last few weeks seems to be
justified," said Subadra Rajappa, head of U.S. rates strategy at Societe
Generale.
While the Fed could introduce additional bond-buying programs known as
quantitative easing or yield-curve control measures to target short-term
rates, fund managers say they expect yields will need to rise
significantly to justify any intervention in the bulk of the curve.
Instead, they are watching for hints that the central bank believes the
worst part of the coronavirus crisis has passed.
"They are really in this transition phase," said Eric Stein, co-director
of global income and portfolio manager at Eaton Vance. "Markets are
functioning, if not all the way back to pre-shock levels, with very
strong debt issuance and market improvement, even though the real
economy is incredibly weak."
As a result, Stein is looking for signs that the Fed believes the
economic rebound can support the rise in yields.
"The Fed will be OK with a slow creep higher, particularly with a
backdrop of a recovery, but if it moves too much and destabilizes the
recovery, there's a reason for concern," he said.
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Pedestrians walk past the New York Stock Exchange as the building
opens for the first time since March while the outbreak of the
coronavirus disease (COVID19) continues in the Manhattan borough of
New York, U.S., May 26, 2020. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
Ed Al-Hussainy, senior interest rate analyst at Columbia Threadneedle, expects
the Fed to focus on its newly announced Main Street Lending Program to support
small- and medium-sized businesses facing financial strain from the pandemic,
rather than introducing significant new stimulus measures.
"The Fed is likely to communicate that there is more scope for fiscal measures
but that is a very uncomfortable spot to be in," he said. "We won't have a clear
sense of direction of the economy until well into the fourth quarter because all
the sequential data now is massively positive."
The manufacturing ISM index rose to 43.1 in May from 41.5 in April, while weekly
jobless claims fell to 1.877 million from 2.126 million the week before.
"Recent economic reports in the U.S. have been uniformly weak, though not any
worse than expected," said Kevin Cummins,senior U.S. economist at NatWest
Markets.
Eddy Vataru, lead portfolio manager at Osterweis Capital Management, said the
larger risk for the Fed is that rates remain too low, making it unlikely that
there will be a significant push for yield curve-control measures.
"We can now discredit the worst outcomes of the virus. The sentiment around the
risks around the virus have really changed," he said, pointing to declining
infection and fatality rates in coronavirus hot spots such as the New York City
region.
As a result, he is moving into corporate debt and mortgage-backed securities and
shying away from Treasuries, which he said have "no investment value" at their
current yields.
"At the end of the day, we have a ton of stimulus, both fiscal and monetary, and
the markets have reacted to it," he said.
(Reporting by David Randall; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Richard Chang)
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